Somers Completes Second Jury Trial as Law Student

While admitting that her last semester in law school was a marathon, recent graduate Christi Somers, '13, says she could not imagine searching for a job as a
prosecutor without the practical experience she gained the past year through
her internship with the Shawnee County District Attorney's office.

She has successfully completed her second
jury trial, one that included one count of domestic battery and one count of
interference with a law enforcement officer. Somers said she handled the case
on her own, from voir dire to sentencing.

"I know what I'm doing," said Somers. "I can handle it. I'm prepared. I can
step into any district attorney or county attorney's office and know how to
handle a case from day one until it's over.

"I felt confident going in. I thought it was a pretty solid
case although there were quite a few obstacles with it. There was an
eye-witness so basically it came down to if the jury would believe the
eye-witness. Going into deliberations I wasn't quite sure how they would go I
couldn't really tell throughout the trial what the jury was feeling. I was
really surprised. I got the guilty on the domestic battery but not on the
interference count. The domestic battery is the top charge so it was the one we
were really wanting. And I offered a plea to defense prior to the trial and
basically the outcome was exactly what the plea would have been. I wish I could
have gotten him guilty on both counts, but it made me feel reassured that I
offered a decent plea for what the case was and the evidence we had. And for
the jury to return almost exactly the same verdict. That was pretty crazy.

"I really don't understand how someone can start as a
prosecutor without completing an internship like this because you really learn
everything that law school can't teach you: how to deal with defense counsel,
how to deal with issues that may arise, how to deal with judges — things like
that."

Somers has worked for the Shawnee County District Attorney's office since
May 2012 after participating in the on-campus interview process at Washburn Law,
coordinated by the Professional Development Office.

"The PDO is there to help you in any fashion that you need.
They bring the district offices onto campus so you can interview with all of
them in the same day. It makes it really convenient for the students' schedules
and I think it helps the district attorneys' offices too, because they can come
and just interview a bunch of people at once. They have the on-campus interview
and then they do call backs in some of the offices so you have multiple opportunities
to get hired someplace. They really help. And afterwards if they know you are
interested in the prosecution they can help look for employers or alumni who can help connect you with
potential employers," Somers said.